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Agriculture Uncategorized

Moving Away from Chemicals–It's not All or Nothing

Have you heard of the Marsden Farm Study? No? Me neither, until just a couple of days ago. Yet the results of this study are so important, I think they should be published, advertised, spread like wildfire. It represents a successful guideline for changes we so desperately need in our chemically-driven agricultural model. Marsden Farm is a model that’s in between ‘strictly organic’ and ‘strictly conventional’. Since I’ve long struggled with the fact that changing agriculture overnight, or even in one or two generations, seems like an impossible task, I read these kinds of studies with a practical eye and new hope in my heart. Experimental farms like Marsden are crucial for showing farmers what can be done now. These methods will not require re-hauling the entire system in one day, but will greatly reduce the severe ecological damage we wreak, year after year, with conventional farming.

Here is a link to the basics behind the study. Or read on, and I can paraphrase for you.

Marsden Farm (located in Iowa) began in 2003 to try reintroducing the concept of ‘integrated pest management’ on a large scale. Integrated Pest Management involves the use of prevention, monitoring, physical removal of pests, biological controls, and even the limited use of pesticides. It’s a range of responses to pests. It’s nothing new. But through the years, chemicals have trumped all other techniques. Spread over the fields on a regular schedule, chemicals are used now to repeatedly douse crops, a sort of preventative cure-all. As we know by now, a ‘cure-all’ is the last thing massive amounts of chemicals represent, and the costs to the environment are long lasting, complex, and often irreversible.

Integrated Pest Management is more time intensive, certainly. However, labor hired to ‘watch the crops’–assessing the types and quantities of pests, manually removing pests or applying biological controls, and yes, using chemicals as an absolute last resort and in small quantities–money spent in this way seems to make more sense than pouring money into the chemical companies for year after year of poisons to be saturated into the ground ‘on schedule’.

Pest management is not the only factor in Marsden’s study, but also ear-round crop rotation and the use of animal inputs (reintroducing animals to the farm–what an idea, right?). The Marsden study is aimed at larger-scale operations, which I think is important. Even though my personal opinion is that we will eventually turn to many small-scale, diverse operations in the future, it’s going to be a gradual process. We need as many great models and ideas for drastically reducing the chemicals we use, on larger farms, now.

Mark Bittman (whom I primarily know as the author of a really incredible vegetarian cookbook called, aptly, “How to Cook Everything Vegetarian”–even though he himself is not fully vegetarian) wrote this article about the study, which I find insightful. Hopefully the ideas presented by farms like Marsden will catch on, and changes will start happening. .

 

Sustainable Farming: A Simple Fix, Zero Cost

By Mark Bittman (original article here)

t’s becoming clear that we can grow all the food we need, and profitably, with far fewer chemicals. And I’m not talking about imposing some utopian vision of small organic farms on the world. Conventional agriculture can shed much of its chemical use – if it wants to.

This was hammered home once again in what may be the most important agricultural study this year, although it has been largely ignored by the media, two of the leading science journals and even one of the study’s sponsors, the often hapless Department of Agriculture.

The study was done on land owned by Iowa State University called the Marsden Farm. On 22 acres of it, beginning in 2003, researchers set up three plots: one replicated the typical Midwestern cycle of planting corn one year and then soybeans the next, along with its routine mix of chemicals. On another, they planted a three-year cycle that included oats; the third plot added a four-year cycle and alfalfa. The longer rotations also integrated the raising of livestock, whose manure was used as fertilizer.

The results were stunning: The longer rotations produced better yields of both corn and soy, reduced the need for nitrogen fertilizer and herbicides by up to 88 percent, reduced the amounts of toxins in groundwater 200-fold and didn’t reduce profits by a single cent.

In short, there was only upside – and no downside at all – associated with the longer rotations. There was an increase in labor costs, but remember that profits were stable. So this is a matter of paying people for their knowledge and smart work instead of paying chemical companies for poisons. And it’s a high-stakes game; according to the Environmental Protection Agency, about five billion pounds of pesticides are used each year in the United States.

No one expects Iowacorn and soybean farmers to turn this thing around tomorrow, but one might at least hope that the U.S.D.A.would trumpet the outcome. The agency declined to comment when I asked about it. One can guess that perhaps no one at the higher levels even knows about it, or that they’re afraid to tell Monsantoabout agency-supported research that demonstrates a decreased need for chemicals. (A conspiracy theorist might note that the journals Science and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences both turned down the study. It was finally published in PLOS One; I first read about it on the Union of Concerned Scientists Web site.)

Debates about how we grow food are usually presented in a simplistic, black-and-white way, conventional versus organic. (The spectrum that includes conventional on one end and organic on the other is not unlike the one that opposes the standard American diet with veganism.) In farming, you have loads of chemicals and disastrous environmental impact against an orthodox, even dogmatic method that is difficult to carry out on a large scale.

But seeing organic as the only alternative to industrial agriculture, or veganism as the only alternative to supersize me, is a bit like saying that the only alternative to the ravages of capitalism is Stalinism; there are other ways. And positioning organic as the only alternative allows its opponents to point to its flaws and say, “See? We have to remain with conventional.”

The Marsden Farm study points to a third path. And though critics of this path can be predictably counted on to say it’s moving backward, the increased yields, markedly decreased input of chemicals, reduced energy costs and stable profits tell another story, one of serious progress.

Nor was this a rinky-dink study: the background and scientific rigor of the authors – who represent the U.S.D.A.’s Agricultural Research Service as well as two of the country’s leading agricultural universities – are unimpeachable. When I asked Adam Davis, an author of the study who works for the U.S.D.A., to summarize the findings, he said, “These were simple changes patterned after those used by North American farmers for generations. What we found was that if you don’t hold the natural forces back they are going to work for you.”

This means that not only is weed suppression a direct result of systematic and increased crop rotation along with mulching, cultivation and other nonchemical techniques, but that by not poisoning the fields, we make it possible for insects, rodents and other critters to do their part and eat weeds and their seeds. In addition, by growing forage crops for cattle or other ruminants you can raise healthy animals that not only contribute to the health of the fields but provide fertilizer. (The same manure that’s a benefit in a system like this is a pollutant in large-scale, confined animal-rearing operations, where thousands of animals make manure disposal an extreme challenge.)

Perhaps most difficult to quantify is that this kind of farming – more thoughtful and less reflexive – requires more walking of the fields, more observations, more applications of fertilizer and chemicals if, when and where they’re needed, rather than on an all-inclusive schedule. “You substitute producer knowledge for blindly using inputs,” Davis says.

So: combine crop rotation, the re-integration of animals into crop production and intelligent farming, and you can use chemicals (to paraphrase the report’s abstract) to fine-tune rather than drive the system, with no loss in performance and in fact the gain of animal products.

Why wouldn’t a farmer go this route? One answer is that first he or she has to hear about it. Another, says Matt Liebman, one of the authors of the study and an agronomy professor at Iowa State, is that, “There’s no cost assigned to environmental externalities” – the environmental damage done by industrial farming, analogous to the health damage done by the “cheap” standard American diet – “and the profitability of doing things with lots of chemical input isn’t questioned.”

This study not only questions those assumptions, it demonstrates that the chemicals contributing to “environmental externalities” can be drastically reduced at no sacrifice, except to that of the bottom line of chemical companies. That direction is in the interest of most of us – or at least those whose well-being doesn’t rely on that bottom line.

Sadly, it seems there isn’t a government agency up to the task of encouraging things to move that way, even in the face of convincing evidence.

 

 

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Green Energy Solar Uncategorized

Solar Flower

I’ve become very interested in projects that normal, everyday people can do that will harness the free power of the sun. This ‘solar flower’ is intriguing, and it can be built very cheaply, or even for no cost if you visit a scrap heap and rummage through your own ‘junk’. What is it used for? “Basically, generating heat. With that heat you can then run external applications such as generating electricity, smokeless cooking, heating and purifying water, making charcoal, anything that heat can be used for.”

Visit www.solarflower.org for more information.

 


What is it?

A solar energy collector you can make easily using scrap materials.

What’s it for?

Basically, generating heat. With that heat you can then run external applications such as generating electricity, smokeless cooking, heating and purifying water, making charcoal, anything that heat can be used for.

How much does it cost?

Depends. All the materials are things you can find in a corner store or scrap heap, so it could potentially cost anywhere between nothing and, let’s say about €$£50 per device.

How much power does it produce, and how efficient is it?

One square meter of full sunlight is about one thousand Watts of power, which is the collector size for which the SolarFlower is designed (although it can probably drive something twice as large). Depending on the materials used, you can assume at least 50% thermal efficiency overall (probably higher), so that would give you 500 Watts in full sunlight. This is enough to heat 50 litres of water to 100 C in a little over 8.5 hours.

What principle do you use to track the sun non-electrically?

It’s a little complicated to express in text, I’m working on some animations at the moment which will make it clearer.

Basically there are two collector mirrors, one big one that concentrates all the energy you’re going to use to power your applications, and a smaller one attached to it which drives the tracker. When the main collector is pointing directly at the sun the focus point of the secondary collector is sitting just off the edge of a little boiler filled with a small amount of ethanol. As the sun moves off by about a degree that hot spot shifts onto the boiler, which in a minute or two starts the ethanol boiling, the vapor exits into a chamber (metal tin) attached to the boiler, and forces out some of the liquid ethanol in it. That liquid goes through a pipe and pours into the waterwheel assembly, turning it, which turns the gearing, which turns the two collectors into the sun, the hot spot shifts off the boiler, the boiling stops, the vapor in the tin starts to collapse and the resulting vacuum sucks ethanol from a reservoir below the waterwheel and refills the whole system.
It all sits there until the sun moves off again.
The small collector has about a two hour range, so if the sun goes behind a cloud or something the system can catch up to it.

What license / patent / protection is on the design?

None. This is an open source hardware project, and as such is not owned, or able to be owned by any one person or company.
Since the designs have now been published they are unable to be patented by anyone, including the original designer.
At some point the project may take on a Creative Commons or similar license, but it will be one which allows any form of use, including commercial. (In fact you are encouraged to make and sell these things, royalty free).
The only thing you are not permitted to do is stop anyone else making and using them in any way.

 

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Uncategorized

Would You Like To Live in a Mushroom?

This is a very cool idea!

Fast Fungi Bricks: Mushroom Blocks Better than Concrete?!

Most people pay attention to the part of the mushroom we see (and sometimes even eat) that grows above the ground – but what about the latticework of tendrils that intertwine inside the dirt from which they grow?

As it turns out, this malleable network can, per Philip Ross“be used to form a super-strong, water-, mold- and fire-resistant building material. The dried mycelium can be grown and formed into just about any shape, and it has a remarkable consistency that makes it stronger, pound for pound, than concrete.” (via Inhabitat)

Stools and chairs are just the start – stone-like arches and eventually whole buildings may be yet to come. Like bamboo, the speed of growth and workability of the material make it a great candidate for locally-grown architecture, particularly in fungi-friendly climates. The strength of concrete, but easier to create and lightweight to boot – we have not seen the last of mushroom-based building technologies.

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Pickled Crabapples

A taste of fall: homemade pickled crabapples

by Stark Bro’s on 10/04/2012
Crabapples 

There are several crabapple trees in our neighborhood that go unharvested. Every year the apples fall to the ground to rot, when they could be utilized in several ways, even if not for eating fresh. Most people do not realize that these little fruits can make delicious food! Here is an interesting way to prepare them: we will be trying it soon. -Andi

 

When most people think of crabapples, they think of small, inedible* fruit. The trees they grow on are often beautiful (even ornamental), and they are excellent pollinators, but traditionally, crabapples aren’t eaten fresh. They are more likely to be used to make jellies and jams, or, in the focus on today’s blog post, pickled crabapples. Some of you might remember pickled crabapples as a side at Thanksgiving along with, or as an alternative to, cranberry sauce. Try the recipe below to enjoy your own delicious, homemade pickled crabapples!

Canned (Pickled) Crabapples

Preparation Time: 2¼ hours
Yield: Approximately 6 pints

You need:

  • 3 pounds crabapples
  • 3 cups extra fine granulated sugar or 2½ cups honey
  • 2½ cups cider vinegar
  • 2½ cups water
  • 1 teaspoon whole cloves
  • 1 teaspoon whole cardamom seeds
  • 3 sticks cinnamon, each broken in 2 or 3 pieces

Directions:

  1. Wash the crabapples (discard those that are blemished), wipe clean the blossom ends, and leave the stem intact but trimmed short.
  2. Prick the crabapples in 2 or 3 places with a fine skewer and place half in a large kettle. Cover with the sugar (or honey), vinegar, and water. Stir all together.
  3. Tie the spices in cheesecloth and add to the crabapples in the kettle.
  4. Cover the kettle and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to a gentle simmer and cook for 15-20 minutes, or until the apples are tender but not falling apart.
  5. Remove the crab apples from the hot syrup and put aside. Repeat with the remaining half of the crabapples.
  6. When all the crabapples have been cooked, remove the kettle from the heat and return the first batch to the hot syrup.
  7. Allow the apples to cool in the syrup.
  8. Drain the crabapples, discard the spices, return the syrup to the pan, and bring to the boil.
  9. Pack the crab apples into pint or quart jars, cover with the boiling syrup to within ¼ inch of the tops, and screw on the lids.
  10. Process for 20 minutes in a boiling water bath.

The recipe above was excerpted from Granny Smith’s Apple Cookbook © Olwen Woodier used with permission from Storey Publishing.

*Note: There are also edible varieties of crabapple that are slightly larger and much sweeter. If you are using sweet, edible crabapples in this recipe — like Chestnut Crabapple or Whitney Crabapple — consider adjusting the amount of sweetener used (sugar or honey), since such a large quantity will not be necessary.

 

Original Post HERE

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Uncategorized

Our Sunflower House!

 

A Sunflower House is an awesome garden experience to work on with the little ones in your life!

 

Our dreams of a sunflower house started when I checked out a copy of Roots Shoots Buckets and Boots by Sharon Lovejoy. What a magical book! With soft watercolor illustrations and easy to read instructions (she calls them ‘recipes’), Lovejoy showed us such wonderful ideas: a pizza patch, a tub of potatoes, a butterfly garden. This book is such an amazing tool for drawing kids into gardening, that I actually bought a copy of it. We like looking at the pictures and reading about the ideas during story time.

 

The illustrations for a Sunflower House project drew us in immediately. A clubhouse made of sunflowers! The kids were all as mesmerized by the idea as I was, and we started making big plans that very day. This ‘RECIPE‘ is not from Roots Shoots Buckets and Boots, but it looks great, too, check it out!

 

Here are Noah and Ella, measuring our space:

 

 

 

Now, things did not go as smoothly as I’d hoped, in the beginning. It took us a lot of tedious labor just to prepare the trench into which the seeds would eventually go. With the first plunge of our trowels into the soil, we realized we were actually digging into a bed of stones. Using a large shovel and several trowels, we spent hours (spread out over several days) scraping out stones, filling our little wheelbarrow, emptying it, repeating. I simply could not believe how many little stones could take the space of a tiny trench!

 

Here we are, working on our trench:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Next we filled the trench with soil.

 

 

 

          

 

The most exciting part came when we put in the seeds. We had several different varieties of sunflowers (which I had found at the dollar store for 3/1.00!). We followed Lovejoy’s ‘recipe’ for measuring out the space between each seed, and alternating varieties in order to create a variegated wall of flowers. This took much more concentration than I had expected (I ended up with quite a headache, actually).

 

THEN the struggles really began. Within two days, almost all of our seeds had been very obviously sabotaged. Only little, empty holes remained. Some critter had come to feast, and I can’t say I blamed them. I mean honestly, there is not a much more tasty seed to eat than a sunflower seed! I was chagrined to think of all the concentration that had gone into the careful measuring, counting, planning—all for the benefit of some tiny paws (or beaks) set on indiscriminate devouring. We put more seeds in. This time, we just sorta kinda followed a plan. The holes left by little digging paws showed us where to replace the seeds, so no measuring.

 

Result of planting effort #2? Almost every seed, dug out and eaten. A few of seeds that had survived the first planting were starting to sprout. Out of those, 2 had been sliced, I’m assuming by cutworms.

 

We were already into the 3rd week of attempting to start our sunflower house, and feeling a bit gloomy. I had an ‘aha’ moment, after stewing for an entire evening about the critters that had found a free buffet in the yard. I thought we could start the seeds indoors, and then after the plants were bigger, stronger and less vulnerable to attack, we could transplant them into the trench.

 

For 2 whole weeks, we nursed the indoor sunflowers sprouts. By now we are pretty good at taking care of indoor starts—and I had confidence in our success due to the wild success of our tomatoes (which we started from seed this year and were at that point really starting to take off outside in the garden).

 

The day came for the transplant. Lovingly, gently, we put all the seedlings into their homes (and at this point I was still sort of trying to alternate varieties as we went along).

 

AND….within the DAY, all the sprouts DIED.

 

By now, my enthusiasm had been transformed into pure and utter frustration. I still wanted the kids to get a chance to have a sunflower house. I still believed in this project and could still see, in my mind, the magical playspace we had dreamed of. They had begun to look at me suspisciously whenever I talked of our sunflower house plans. They didn’t trust that the whole idea was even true anymore, and probably thought it was all a fairy tale. The project was no longer something they were thrilled about, so I sort of had to forge on with this one on my own, still determined.

 

I took the rest of the seeds that I had (plus I went the dollar store and bought the rest of their packets—not a huge loss at 3 packs for a dollar), and went on a seed planting frenzy. No measuring, no careful sorting and alternating. I just took those seeds and started pushing them into the ground, one after another, going around the perimeter several times. I may have cursed at the seeds a couple times (so much for tender loving care), so it’s a good thing the kids weren’t around during this planting.

 

But hey…there is a happy ending after all! We’ll just sorta skip over the ‘dark moments of the sunflower house project’ and pretend it all went the way it was meant to. 😉

 

 

Sprouts began to not only come up, but thrive. Critters stayed out of sight (I am pretty certain the neighbor’s trusty cat had a lot to do with this. And I am also pretty certain we praised that cat profusely when we saw him stalking a chipmunk). I began to really believe that we might have success, and the kids began to notice that something was happening with our seemingly abandoned project.

 

Fast forward to now—after weeks of tending the finally successful sunflowers–and the dream has become a reality. Once the sprouts established themselves all they needed was occasional watering. The kids now have a magical place to play. With no prompting from me, I find them in there with their snacks, books, or just hanging out.

 

 

           

 

The bees have come to our flowers in droves. Initially this alarmed a few of the kids, who are terrified of anything that buzzes. I explained that the bees won’t usually sting if they are left alone, and that they have a wonderful job–helping all plants to keep growing and thriving. The kids have learned to get excited when they see a bee happily crawling around on one of the flower’s faces.

 

 

We can see the sunflower house from Noah’s bedroom window, which is a nice touch. When it’s not quite time to go outside for the day, the kids can peer out the window at the wonderful thing we have created! All the struggle, hard work, and frustrations were absolutely worth it, and you can bet that a sunflower house will grow in our yard every summer from now on.

             

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Take Control of Your Home’s Air Quality

Mold, dander, pollen! As an allergy suffer myself there are many things I must do to protect myself, but even if you do not have allergies, you need to be aware of the particulate matter and other pollutants you and your children are breathing. There is a walk-through guide of contamination here, and of course this article. Enjoy!
 
 
 

Until you or someone in your household begins to suffer from allergies, asthma or chemical sensitivities, it is not too often that the thought of the air quality in your home comes to mind. This is an unfortunate fact because it is widely understood by the agencies and organizations that deal with air quality that indoor air quality is generally worse than that of outdoor air! This means that the place where you spend the bulk of your time, your home, could be causing you more problems than you think.

There is a wide variety of particulate and gaseous contamination that could be affecting your home and just because no one in the household is experiencing symptoms, does not mean that they do not exist. The allergens that we are all familiar with like pollen, dander and dust are present in some level in most homes. Even homes without pets are likely to have dander due to the prevalence of pets and the fact that tiny allergens like dander and pollen can be carried back into the home on clothing. Dusts are mostly created within the home and consist of a combination of many types of particles including dead skin cells, lint and dust mite allergens.

VOC’s or Volitile Organic Compounds comprise a large group of chemical vapors which orginate from various sources in the home. These may be relatively harmless odor causing compounds eminating from a trashcan, kitchen or bathroom or they could be chemicals linked with cancer like formaldehyde which is widely used in building materials.

Becoming aware that these contaminants do exist and understanding where they come from is the first step in beginning to improve the air quality of your home. There are simple steps that can be taken depending on the allergen or chemical which can reduce its introduction into the home; we refer to this as source reduction. This may be removing a pet from the home or limiting their exposure to parts of the home. It could be removing your outer layers of clothing at the door to prevent the introduction of pollen or putting dust mite bags over mattresses and bedding to prevent their proliferation. Even something a simple as switching which chemical cleaners you use to those that do not contain harsh chemicals that will pollute your home can make a big difference in your indoor air quality.

Once you have taken steps to reduce the introduction and creation of contaminants, being proactive about the removal of those which still exist will put you well on your way to a healthy home environment. Reducing clutter will provide fewer places for dust to settle and makes regular cleaning easier and more effective. The use of a high quality HEPA vacuum can do wonders for removing settled allergens from flooring, furniture and curtains or drapes. Getting into a proper cleaning routine can be a touch discipline, but if you are trying to better the health symptoms of someone in the home, it is worth the effort. Lastly, using a HEPA air purifier will let you put technology to work for you. This widely available appliance will actively suck air through layers of filtration which remove airborne particles while you go about your daily life. VOC removal is also possible when you choose an air purifier with sufficient amounts of activated carbon.

If you are hoping to understand what in your home is causing allergies, asthma or chemical sensitivities then testing it the fast track to an answer. By getting testing from a medical professional to determine you or your loved one’s specific triggers and then having the home tested for which triggers exist at high levels you will have a much better idea of where to start.

You can learn a lot more about indoor air quality and how air purification can help by visiting AirPurifierSource.com. There is plenty of information packed into their guide (which can be found here). The guide will walk you right through the learning process. Once you have a good understanding of the issues, they feature purifiers for just about every purpose from allergies and asthma  to pets and odors.

This means no more guessing as to which purifier is right for your home. Identify your needs. Understand the features. Define a budget, and the decision is a breeze. Getting started couldn’t be easier. Begin making your home a healthier place to live today!

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Nerd gardening: use an arduino micro controller and sensors to perfect nature.

We here at FutureFarming.Org are working to use the Ardunio Microcontroller to create an affordable sensor. A series of sensors would help gardeners know what they need to add or subtract (organically of course) with less mistakes and no doing unneeded things.

modulesIn the future these could be used on a larger scale to help family farmers with many fields check them all at a glance.

They can auto water, fertilize, everything. And they can be programmed in such a way that they will do anything you can think of.

Auto controlling a greenhouse, tweeting you alerts of problems with your greenhouses or fields (text messages can be done as well), even robot drones with cameras to fly around fields (manually or auto) to check fields with a birds eye view. (Drones can do more than kill…)

We wil lbe working on the prototypes this coming year with code and tips, plus a purchase list to follow!

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Three Quick Steps to an Eco-Friendly Kitchen that Saves Money

The kitchen is one of the most active rooms in any home, both in terms of time spent inside of it and the amount of energy that is required to operate it. A kitchen for a family of four typically represents anywhere between 20 and 40 percent of its annual household energy consumption, which means that any steps taken to reduce energy use in the kitchen can have a lasting impact. Below are three quick steps to making any kitchen a bit more eco-friendly.

Step 1: Start with the Refrigerator

As a refrigerator’s job is keeping its contents cold, it will have to do additional work – and therefore consume more energy – when it is loaded with material. Regularly cleaning all of the old leftovers, stale items and containers of liquid out of a fridge will reduce the amount of power required to keep everything chilled. The same goes for a freezer; if there’s anything out of date or freezer-burned sitting in there, toss it out!

Step 2: Upgrade those Old Appliances

While it might seem better for the environment to avoid replacing an older dishwasher, stove or refrigerator, older models can actually be quite energy-inefficient and may be worth replacing. At minimum it’s recommended to have Energy Star compliant appliances, which have to meet strict energy consumption standards to receive certification. When an older appliance breaks down, consider whether or not it might save energy and money over the long term to replace it or if it’s best to have a repairman fix it up.

Step 3: There’s Gold in the Garbage

Another easy step a family can take to reduce a kitchen’s eco-footprint is to reduce the amount of garbage produced. A family can produce more than a ton of kitchen garbage in a year, and much of it is compostable food waste that could have gone to better use. Those with no yard space for an outdoor compost pile can opt for an indoor compost bin which will keep smells to a minimum. The resulting compost can be used for gardening, for use as topsoil or given away.

These are just a few of the ways that one can tackle making their kitchen a bit friendlier to the environment while saving a bit of cash each year. At the end of the day, reducing consumption is the best way to keep costs and eco-footprints to a minimum; with a bit of ingenuity and hard work, many items can be foregone and

Ryan writes for Ethosource, a company dedicated to refurbishing used office furniture.

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Improving The Front And Back Yard

Cheery Trees and Plum Trees
Image by Alejandro Hernandez

Even though many places come with a big yard, they are rarely as nice as most people want.   Unfortunately most people do not have a direction when it comes to yard care and design, and they end up keeping up a bit but never having it the way they truly want.  Fortunately designing a yard is not too difficult with a little thought and preparation, and can be the reason a family stays in the residence or moves elsewhere in the future.

The complaint most people have about their yard is the lack of good grass that is patchy and does not look attractive most of the time.  The common grass in many areas is a result of planting the wrong product many years ago and it doing an ok job at surviving and spreading over the years.  Based on the area involved the type of grass can vary greatly.  Often times there are types of grass that will grow and is green throughout most of the year without a lot of care.  Sometimes these types of grass will call for extra work, but with the right tools watering or feeding can be much easier than many think.

Keeping The Intended Functionality

Placing shrubs can be hard to choose where everything goes, but the most important thing is to keep the intended functionality of the yard.  Many people like open ended pathways throughout their yard which requires a decent amount of plants, but also prefer one area to be wide open for various outdoor activities.  Seat swings and tire swings are very popular since they offer a fun and relaxing way to spend time outdoors around friends and family.

Placing trees is one of the most important things that should be considered.  The idea is to keep the area open enough to allow adequate light in, but also block lighting in certain areas for shade during the summer time.  Providing these different environments allows an area to be used often throughout most of the year rather than being useless throughout large parts of the year.  It can be fun to add Fruit Trees as well to give the trees a little bit more function than just providing shade and looks.  Eating from the Apple Trees at home is a memory that people carry with them throughout their entire life.

Lastly adding amenities can provide things to do to get people interested in going outside.  Most people find it fun to swim in a pool, and installing a pool or even just water based activities is a fun past time for everyone.  Another idea is to have a sports area with a small tennis court or brick wall for wall ball or other different types of fun games.

Smith’s Nursery is America’s #1 tree and plant distributor. We carry fruit trees including cheery trees, peach trees, apple trees, nut trees, plum trees, berry plants, roses and much more.

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Bicycling Environmentalism Sustainability Uncategorized

RelayRides: A Pollution Solution

     So I have written several times before about the pitfalls of being a bike rider in a big city. Often there are not bike lanes, traffic is rude, or worse dangerous, and the weather tends not to co-operate. The worst one of all is when I just CANNOT get somewhere without a car. I personally do not own a car and many of my friends do not either. Insurance, maintenance, gas, pollution and a million other reasons for me not to own my own car. But the problem is our society is built for cars. If I want to get to the far north of my town you need a car. So I tried services that rent, or the bus, and still sometimes I had to be the friend calling to borrow the car.

      Well now I found a great idea out of Boston, (its also in San Fransisco) one that is moving to a nationwide platform before to long I hope. It’s called RelayRides car rentals.

       So you can go check out their website, register to rent a car, OR you can register to rent your car out. Make that disused gas guzzler as shared car. It will help pay for all the aforementioned cost of ownership. They have a great insurance policy.

From their Website:

“Just need to run a few errands? Why deal with car ownership or the hassle of traditional car sharing when RelayRides lets you borrow your neighbors’ cars from as low as $5/hr. Or if you own a car, don’t just let it sit around when you could be making up to $7,000/year loaning it out safely and securely.”

      RelayRides start at $5/hr with gas and insurance included, but since the cars belong to your neighbors, they’re conveniently located just down the street AND you keep the money local. Personally I think the founder, Shelby Clark, shows well how the money stays local, a double bonus. This isn’t some centralized rental company, I may soon be able to rent my neighbors Toyota. Imagine the local economy boost this could bring!

     The average car is only used 1 hour per day. By letting your neighbors borrow your car, you’re keeping an average of 15 other cars off the road while reducing overall driving.

     You can check out the five easy steps to get signed up, its a snap. This isn’t the ultimate fix, but it’s a pretty good one!